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HISTORY
OF PEPPER
Encyclopedia of Spices
Pepper: Piper nigrum: Black, White, Green
Fam: Piperaceae
Schinus terebinthifolius: Pink Pepper
Fam: Anacardiaceae
The history of the spice trade is, above all, the history of pepper,
the ‘King of Spices’. Pepper has been moving westward
from India for 4,000 years.
It has been used in trading as an exchange medium like money and,
at times, has been valued so highly that a single peppercorn dropped
on the floor would be hunted like a lost pearl. |
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In classical times ‘tributes’ were paid
in pepper, and both Attila the Hun and Alaric I the Visigoth demanded
pepper as a substantial part of Rome’s ransom. Since the Middle
Ages, pepper was the core of the European spice trade, with Genoa
and Venice dominating the market. The Italian ‘pepperers’
monopoly of overland trade routes was the major determining factor
in driving the search for an eastern sea route. For more historical
information, read Pepper: King of Spices.
Spice Description
Pepper comes from several species of a vinous plant, the spice being
the fruit, called peppercorns. Black pepper is the dried, unripe berry.
The corns are wrinkled and spherical, about 5 mm (1/8 in) in diameter.
Malabar and Tellicherry pepper are both considered top quality due
to size and maturity, with only 10% of the largest corns being graded
as Tellicherry. White pepper starts out the same as the black, but
are allowed to ripen more fully on the vine. The outer shell is then
removed by soaking the berries in water until the shell falls off,
or are held under flowing spring water, yielding a whiter, cleaner
pepper. Green pepper is from the same fruit but is harvested before
they mature. Pink pepper, which is not a vinous pepper, comes from
the French island of Reunion. Pink peppercorns have a brittle, papery
pink skin enclosing a hard, irregular seed, much smaller than the
whole fruit.
Bouquet: aromatic, pungent
Flavour: Black pepper is very pungent and fiery. Hotness Scale: 8
White pepper is less pungent. Hotness Scale: 7
Green pepper is milder with a cleaner, fresher flavour. Hotness Scale:
3 Preparation and Storage
Pepper is best purchased whole, as freshly ground pepper is vastly
superior to the ready ground powder. Whole peppercorns keep their
flavour indefinitely but quickly loses its aroma and heat after it
has been ground. Peppercorns are very hard but easily ground in a
peppermill. Cracked pepper is the partially broken corns, crushed
using a mortar and pestle or with a rolling pin. Dried green peppercorns
can be reconstituted for mashing into a paste by soaking in water.
Peppercorns should be stored in airtight containers, away from sunlight.
Culinary Uses
Pepper is best ground directly on to food. With hot food it is best
to add pepper well towards the end of the cooking process, to preserve
its aroma. White pepper is used in white sauces rather than black
pepper, which would give the sauce a speckled appearance. Green peppercorns
can be mashed with garlic, cinnamon or to make a spiced butter or
with cream to make a fresh and attractive sauce for fish. Pink peppercorns
are called for in a variety of dishes, from poultry to vegetables
and fish. Attributed Medicinal Properties
Stomachic; carminative; aromatic stimulant; antibacterial; diaphoretic.
Stimulates the taste-buds causing reflex stimulation of gastric secretions,
improving digestion and treating gastro-intestinal upsets and flatulence.
Pepper calms nausea and raises body temperature, making it valuable
for treating fevers and chills. Plant Description
and Cultivation
An herbaceous annual of the buttercup family, about 60 cm (2 ft) high.
The gray--green leaves are wispy and threadlike. Flowers are have
five petals bout 2.5 cm wide (1 in), white with blue veins and appearing
between June and September. They yield a seed capsule with five compartments
each topped by a spike. The compartments open when dried to disperse
the seeds. Nigella is native to western Asia where it grows both wild
and cultivated. India, Egypt and the Middle East also cultivate it.
Other Names Black
French: poivre
German: Pfeffer
Italian: pepe nero
Spanish: pimienta negra
Arabic: filfil
Indian: gol/kala,i, mir(i)ch(i)
Indonesian: merica hitam, meritja
Lao: phik noi
Malay: lada hitam
Thai: prik ki tai White
French: poivre blanc
German: Weisser Pfeffer
Italian: pepe bianco
Spanish: pimienta blanca Green
French: poivre vert
German: Gruner Pfeffer
Italian: pepe verde
Spanish: pimienta verde Pink
French: poivre rose
German: Blassroter Pfeffer
Italian: pepe rosa
Spanish: pimienta rosa |
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